Australian authorities are expanding the use of shark-spotting drones along beaches in New South Wales, starting from July 1, as part of a larger initiative to improve safety for swimmers. The state government plans to invest an additional $34 million in drones equipped with artificial intelligence, increasing total funding for shark mitigation to $120 million over two years. This follows several recent shark attack incidents, including a fatal bite in Sydney Harbour and a severe injury at Coogee Beach. Drones will monitor approximately 70 beaches daily, including those not currently patrolled by lifeguards, with monitoring extending from dawn to dusk. Scientists suggest rising ocean temperatures may be influencing shark behavior, leading to increased human-shark interactions.
Procjena pristranosti (Sredina): The article presents factual information about government actions and investments related to public safety, without overtly favoring any political perspective. It includes quotes from officials and mentions scientific theories but does not exhibit biased language or selective sourcing.
Zašto ove ocjene (Činjenice 95 · Objektivnost 85): Accurately reports the $34 million investment and expansion of drone coverage, aligning with the primary source. However, it includes specific incident details (e.g., Coogee Beach attack) not present in the original document, which could be seen as adding context not explicitly stated. Tone leans sl





